Health Library

Types of Surgery for Pancreatic Cancer

Types of Surgery for Pancreatic Cancer

There are several types of surgery for pancreatic cancer. The type of surgery you need depends on the location of the tumor in your pancreas, and whether your doctor can remove all of the cancer. Following are the main types of surgery.

Whipple procedure (also called pancreaticoduodenectomy)

This surgery is the most common for completely removing tumors from the pancreas. The surgeon removes:

The head of the pancreas, which is the wide end

Lymph nodes near the bile duct

Duodenum, which is part of the small intestine

Part of the stomach

In some cases, the body of the pancreas, which is the middle section

The gallbladder and part of the common bile duct

After this surgery, bile from your liver, food from your stomach, and digestive juices from the remaining part of your pancreas all enter your small intestine, so you can have normal digestion.

Pylorus-preserving pancreaticoduodenectomy

This surgery is similar to the Whipple procedure. However, your surgeon does not remove the lower part of your stomach.

Total pancreatectomy

Surgeons perform this less often than they perform the Whipple procedure. Your surgeon removes your:

Entire pancreas

Distal common bile duct

Duodenum, which is part of your small intestine

Part of your stomach

Spleen

Gallbladder, if you still have one

Once your surgeon removes your entire pancreas, you won’t be able to make pancreatic juices or insulin. You will need to test your blood glucose levels, give yourself insulin injections, and take other steps to keep your blood glucose levels normal. You will also need to take pancreatic enzyme pills with food to aid in digestion.

Distal pancreatectomy

Your surgeon will sometimes perform this surgery if your cancer is confined to the tail of your pancreas. For this surgery, your surgeon removes only the tail of your pancreas, which is the thin part, and perhaps part of its body, the middle section. The surgeon also usually removes your spleen.

Palliative procedures

Your doctor may suggest surgery and other procedures to ease or prevent symptoms associated with pancreatic cancer, but these surgeries are not intended to cure the disease. These procedures may help restore your bile flow, allow food to leave your stomach into your small intestine, or ease pain. For instance, surgery may relieve a blocked bile duct by bypassing it. Surgery may also relieve a blockage at the outlet of the stomach to the first part of the small intestine (called the duodenum) by bypassing it. This is called bowel-bypass surgery. It doesn’t cure the disease. These are some of the types of palliative surgery:

Surgery to redirect the flow of bile directly into your small intestine

Surgery to allow your stomach to empty into another portion of your small intestine

Injections to block or numb nerves near your pancreas

Placing a stent (a small tube) inside the bile duct or duodenum to help keep it open